Davis v. State Ex Rel. Pecsok

200 N.E. 181, 130 Ohio St. 411, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 411, 5 Ohio Op. 20, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 378
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1936
Docket25407
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 200 N.E. 181 (Davis v. State Ex Rel. Pecsok) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. State Ex Rel. Pecsok, 200 N.E. 181, 130 Ohio St. 411, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 411, 5 Ohio Op. 20, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 378 (Ohio 1936).

Opinion

Stephenson, J.

This is a taxpayer’s action in mandamus originating in the Court of Appeals of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, wherein it was sought to compel Harry L. Davis, as Mayor of the city of Cleveland, Louis C. West, as Director of Finance, Russell Y. Johnson, as Treasurer, and F. E. McKee, as Commissioner of Accounts of the city, to issue a voucher and check for the payment of $1,250,000, claimed to be owing by the city to the Treasury Investment Account.

The Court of Appeals found in favor of the relator and awarded a writ of mandamus as prayed for. Error is prosecuted to this court to reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals of Cuyahoga county, Ohio.

It is conceded that whatever there is of law in this case must be found in the following sections of the General Code of Ohio and of the Charter and Code of the city of Cleveland:

Section 4514, General Code: “The trustees of the sinking fund shall invest all moneys received by them in bonds of the United States, the State of Ohio, or of any municipal corporation, school, township or county bonds, in such state, and hold in reserve only such sums as may be needed for effecting the terms of this *415 title. All interest received by them shall be re-invested in like manner.”

Section 2293-4, General Code: “In anticipation of the collection of current revenues in and for any fiscal year, the taxing authority of any subdivision may borrow money and issue notes therefor, but the aggregate of such loans shall not exceed one-half of the amount estimated to be received from the next ensuing semiannual settlement of taxes for such fiscal year as estimated by the budget commission, other than taxes to be received for the payment of debt charges, and all advances. The sums so anticipated shall be deemed appropriated for the payment of such notes at maturity. The notes shall not run for a longer period than six months and the proceeds therefrom shall be used only for the purposes for which the anticipated taxes were levied, collected and appropriated. No subdivision shall borrow money or issue certificates in anticipation of the February tax settlement before January first of the year of such tax settlement.”

Section 4296-1, General Code: “The council or other legislative authority of any city may by ordinance provide that whenever there are moneys in the treasury of such city which will not be required to be used by such city for a period of six months or more, such moneys may in lieu of being deposited in a bank or banks be invested in obligations of such city in the manner prescribed in the next succeeding three sections hereof. * * * ”

Section 4296-2, General Code: “Whenever any obligations of a city, the council or other legislative body of which has passed an ordinance as authorized by section 4296-1 hereof, are to be sold, and the same are not taken by the sinking fund commission, or when such obligations are otherwise available for purchase by such city, the auditor or other chief fiscal officer shall submit to the mayor, or to the chief executive officer if the mayor be not such, and to the chief law *416 officer of such city, a statement of moneys in the treasury or in the process of collection, and a schedule showing the probable requirements of money for the use of the city for such period not less than six months as the aforesaid ordinance or the chief executive officer shall direct, together with a recommendation as to whether any moneys in the treasury should be invested in such obligations. The mayor or other chief executive officer, the chief law officer, and the auditor or other chief fiscal officer may thereupon order such investments of moneys in the treasury in such obligations, at not more than par and accrued interest, as they may deem advisable in the interest of the city. It shall not be necessary to advertise such bonds before such investment is made. No investment shall be made except in obligations which have been passed upon and approved as to validity by a reputable firm of bond attorneys. Whenever it is necessary to convert any such investment into cash, it shall be done by first offering the obligations held by the city to the sinking fund commission, and if the sinking fund commission decline to take the same or any part thereof, then such remaining obligations shall be sold in any manner authorized by law for the sale of investments by the sinking fund; provided, that no such obligations shall be sold for less than par and accrued interest.”

Section 4296-3, General Code: “The chief accounting officer of such city shall maintain an account to be known as the ‘treasury investment account’ in which he shall enter all transactions relating to the investment of treasury funds, as provided in sections 4296-1 and 4296-2. He shall also maintain a record and furnish to the treasurer a duplicate of all items entered thereon, showing all bonds or other securities purchased or sold for the account of the treasury, with the number, maturity, date, and interest rate of each. He shall also keep a record of the number and maturity of interest coupons, and whenever any such securities or *417 interest coupons are due shall issue his order for the collection of the same,-in the same manner as other receipts are collected.”

Section 110, Cleveland Municipal Code: “The sinking fund commission shall invest, subject to the limitations of municipal code section 85-1, all moneys received by them in bonds or treasury notes of the United States; bonds of the state of Ohio; bonds or special assessment notes of any municipal corporation of Ohio; school, township or county bonds of the state of Ohio; and hold in reserve only such sums as may in the judgment of said commission be required for the payment of obligations under their supervision.”

Section 87, Cleveland Municipal Code: “All public moneys coming into the hands of the city treasurer, as city treasurer of the city of Cleveland from whatever source, shall be deposited by the city treasurer as hereinafter provided, in such banks as are designated in the manner herein provided as the depositaries of such money, provided, however, that the city treasurer may retain in his office or in such other offices of the city as the same may be necessary, such amounts of public money, not exceeding sixty thousand dollars ($60,000.00), as may be required to be used in the transaction of the daily business of the city in such offices, provided, however, that all such moneys belonging to the city of Cleveland which at any time will not be required to be used by the city for a period of six months may in lieu of being deposited as herein required be invested in obligations of the city of Cleveland. ’ ’

Section 87-A, Cleveland Municipal Code: “Whenever any obligations of the city of Cleveland are to be sold, and the same are not taken by the sinking fund commission, or when such obligations are otherwise available for purchase by the city, the director of finance shall submit to the city manager and the director of law a statement of moneys in the treasury or in the *418

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 N.E. 181, 130 Ohio St. 411, 130 Ohio St. (N.S.) 411, 5 Ohio Op. 20, 1936 Ohio LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-state-ex-rel-pecsok-ohio-1936.